In Re Tobiga

791 P.2d 830, 310 Or. 46, 1990 Ore. LEXIS 140
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1990
DocketSC S34149
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 791 P.2d 830 (In Re Tobiga) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Tobiga, 791 P.2d 830, 310 Or. 46, 1990 Ore. LEXIS 140 (Or. 1990).

Opinions

[48]*48FADELEY, J.

This is a contested Bar admission case involving the Applicant, Somtim Tobiga, who graduated from Northwestern School of Law of Lewis and Clark College in 1983 and, on his seventh attempt, passed the February 1987 Bar Examination. However, the Board of Bar Examiners questioned whether he met the character qualifications for admission. We referred the matter to the Oregon State Bar, which filed three objections to his admission. A Trial Panel majority recommended against Applicant’s admission. After de novo review, the court finds the Applicant of present good moral character and admits him.

OBJECTIONS TO ADMISSION

The Oregon State Bar stated as objections to Applicant’s admission that:

1. In 1985, Applicant was accused of shoplifting and agreed to a civil compromise before the charges were dismissed;
2. In October 1986, Applicant inaccurately answered a yes- or-no written question on an application for admission. He checked the “no” box to question 16(d), which asked, “Do you now have any accounts or obligations past due more than 60 days?” At that time, he owed about $1,300 to a collection agency on overdue loans made to him by the Oregon State Bar Affirmative Action Program between 1982 and April 1984.
3. Applicant was not credible or consistent in his explanations about the two foregoing events and was purposefully misleading in his various statements about the “no” answer.1

Applicant acknowledges that he had been charged with shoplifting, but not convicted, and that he owed money on the Bar loans when he answered “no” to the question. He argues that the “no” answer was a “mistake” and that the loans were repaid by May 20,1987, shortly after he received a long-sought itemization of the amount owed. He denies intent “to shoplift. He also denies that his explanations to the Bar were misleading or intended to deceive.

[49]*49This case turns on the credibility or . honesty of the Applicant. The Trial Panel found that neither the “shoplifting” charge nor the incorrect “no” answer in and of themselves justified its recommendation to deny admission to the Bar of this court. The Trial Panel stated: “Rather, it is the explanations of the failure to disclose the loans that compels our decision.”

FACTS

A. The Loans

Applicant borrowed $10,050.27 in nine separate loans from the Bar’s Affirmative Action program. Promissory notes covering five of the loans were entitled “Affirmative Action Program - Conditional Loan Program” and were dated variously from August 27,1980, through September 16,1982. One of the four remaining notes was entitled “Affirmative Action Program - Emergency Student Loan Program,” was for $100.27, and was dated April 13, 1982. The seventh, eighth, and ninth notes were entitled “Affirmative Action Program - Bar Examination Loan Program” and were dated from April 23,1982 through April 16,1984.

On August 26, 1983, the Bar sent Applicant a one-sentence letter stating that:

“This is to confirm repayment of your conditional loan [sic] of $8,750 is waived due to your sitting for the July, 1983, Oregon Bar Exam.”

The amount in this forgiveness letter totals the five separate “conditional loan program” notes, although by the time the letter was issued other loans had been made.

During late 1982 and early 1983, Applicant made small payments on the $100.27 emergency loan reducing the balance on that note to $47.82. By arrangement with the Bar’s Affirmative Action Program, and based on a showing of inability to pay, all loans were deferred for payment until September 1,1984. Applicant did not resume payments.

On July 15,1985, the Bar mailed Applicant a certified letter to his former Scholls Ferry Road address stating that the full principal balance on four loans would be accelerated and declared due “if we do not hear from you” and that the accounts would be turned over to the Bar’s collection agency for further action

[50]*50“[i]f we have not heard from you by July 31 [sic] 1985.”

The Applicant received this letter August 1. In the case of other certified letters which, if received, would tend to demonstrate inconsistencies in the Applicant’s explanations, the certified mail form numbers do not match up and there are no return postcards showing receipt of the letters.

On August 12,1985, the Bar wrote Applicant, by letter addressed to his newer address on Barnes Road, that the Bar had accelerated the one emergency loan note and the three Bar exam loan notes and that the full balance was payable. This letter stated: “We are forwarding these accounts to The Credit Bureau Incorporated for collection.” A partially itemized statement attached to the Bar’s file copy of the letter stated the total amount due was $1,495.96. The $100.27 student emergency loan was listed erroneously on the statement at $300, with a balance due of $254.71. All balances included interest at three percent calculated through August 11, 1985.

B. Collection Agency Efforts

The collection agency telephoned Applicant August 27, 1985, demanding a greater sum than he owed. In two telephone calls in January 1986, the collection agency also demanded a different, increased amount of $1,700 to $1,800.

Applicant admitted at all times that he owed the loans but disputed that the amount demanded was correct. Applicant and the collection agency argued. A credit report showed that Applicant owed no other bills but that he lacked a job or assets to pay any judgment that might be obtained. No court action was taken to collect, and the collection efforts became dormant.

On March 16,1987, Applicant received a letter from the collection agency demanding payment of $2,006. Applicant demanded, in writing, a detailed statement of the amounts due on the four loans. The collection company obtained the detailed statement from the Bar in April of 1987 and provided the accounting to Applicant.

Applicant paid the debt to the Bar by borrowing from another lender less than a month after the detailed accounting of the debt was provided to him.

[51]*51 C. The Shoplifting Charge

A private store detective arrested Applicant on December 27,1985, after he left a grocery store with a package of meat in his overcoat pocket without paying. The detective’s testimony at the Trial Panel hearing is not inconsistent with Applicant’s version of events. The unresolved fact issue is whether he intended to steal or was instead distracted by events in the store and a suddenly remembered appointment, as he claims.

LEGAL STANDARDS FOR ADMISSION

ORS 9.220 provides:

“An applicant for admission as attorney must apply to the Supreme Court and show that the applicant:
“(1) Is at least 18 years old * * *.
“(2)(a) Is a person of good moral character.

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Related

In Re Complaint as to the Conduct of Kimmell
31 P.3d 414 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2001)
In Re Jaffee
874 P.2d 1299 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1994)
In Re Tobiga
791 P.2d 830 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1990)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
791 P.2d 830, 310 Or. 46, 1990 Ore. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-tobiga-or-1990.